| Literature DB >> 28329763 |
Andrew A Wylie1, Joseph Schoepfer2, Wolfgang Jahnke2, Sandra W Cowan-Jacob2, Alice Loo1, Pascal Furet2, Andreas L Marzinzik2, Xavier Pelle2, Jerry Donovan1, Wenjing Zhu1, Silvia Buonamici1, A Quamrul Hassan1, Franco Lombardo1, Varsha Iyer2, Michael Palmer1, Giuliano Berellini1, Stephanie Dodd1, Sanjeev Thohan1, Hans Bitter1, Susan Branford3, David M Ross4, Timothy P Hughes5, Lilli Petruzzelli1, K Gary Vanasse1, Markus Warmuth1, Francesco Hofmann2, Nicholas J Keen1, William R Sellers1.
Abstract
Chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) is driven by the activity of the BCR-ABL1 fusion oncoprotein. ABL1 kinase inhibitors have improved the clinical outcomes for patients with CML, with over 80% of patients treated with imatinib surviving for more than 10 years. Second-generation ABL1 kinase inhibitors induce more potent molecular responses in both previously untreated and imatinib-resistant patients with CML. Studies in patients with chronic-phase CML have shown that around 50% of patients who achieve and maintain undetectable BCR-ABL1 transcript levels for at least 2 years remain disease-free after the withdrawal of treatment. Here we characterize ABL001 (asciminib), a potent and selective allosteric ABL1 inhibitor that is undergoing clinical development testing in patients with CML and Philadelphia chromosome-positive (Ph+) acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. In contrast to catalytic-site ABL1 kinase inhibitors, ABL001 binds to the myristoyl pocket of ABL1 and induces the formation of an inactive kinase conformation. ABL001 and second-generation catalytic inhibitors have similar cellular potencies but distinct patterns of resistance mutations, with genetic barcoding studies revealing pre-existing clonal populations with no shared resistance between ABL001 and the catalytic inhibitor nilotinib. Consistent with this profile, acquired resistance was observed with single-agent therapy in mice; however, the combination of ABL001 and nilotinib led to complete disease control and eradicated CML xenograft tumours without recurrence after the cessation of treatment.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28329763 DOI: 10.1038/nature21702
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962